Catherine Meadows

American cryptographer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Catherine Ann Meadows is an American cryptographer known for her development of tools for the formal verification and automated discovery of flaws in cryptographic protocols.[1] She is a senior researcher in the Center for High Assurance Systems at the Naval Research Laboratory and the head of the laboratory's Formal Methods Section.[2]

OccupationCryptographer
EmployerCenter for High Assurance Systems at the Naval Research Laboratory
KnownforDeveloping tools for formal verification of cryptographic protocols
Quick facts Education, Occupation ...
Catherine Ann Meadows
EducationUniversity of Chicago (1975), Ph.D. at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign (1981)
OccupationCryptographer
EmployerCenter for High Assurance Systems at the Naval Research Laboratory
Known forDeveloping tools for formal verification of cryptographic protocols
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Education and career

Meadows is a 1975 graduate of the University of Chicago.[3] She completed a Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1981.[3] Her dissertation, Projections of Varieties, concerned algebraic geometry and was supervised by E. Graham Evans Jr.[4] She was an assistant professor of mathematics at Texas A&M University from 1981 to 1985 before joining the Naval Research Laboratory.[3]

Recognition

A symposium was held in Meadows's honor in Fredericksburg, Virginia in May 2019, and a collection of essays from the symposium was published as a festschrift.[1]

References

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